Do no harm to a signal! Does this mean.....


So basic cables are harming the precious delicate analogue signal as it approaches a speaker.  

and how to avoid?  
Isnt this the reason for paying up for cables cause,its so hard to limit signal damage? Not about improving signal. So much damage going on.  

never dreamed how much i was harming the signal.  Does all this make sense???


jumia

clearthink
1,216 posts04-29-2021 10:59am
dletch2
""Trust your ears" never means "Trust your ears". It usually means, use your ears, but trust your eyes. Almost as a rule, anyone who makes the statement, "Trust your ears", never trusts their own ears. That is why they never blind test."

Of course this is dishonest, deceptive and untrue there are audiophiles who blind test this is just an insult, an attack, an arrogant posturing to establish dismiss, degrade, and demean the audiophile community. Blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test it is the fundamental basis, premise, and foundation of the "measurentalists" religion, faith, and fervently held belief they believe if you do not blind test you are deluded, insane, and dishonest what a load of what Americans call "hooey."

Don’t just listen no no no no blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test blind test


Obviously no comment is needed. Let’s just leave this here for posterity.  This comment proves my point better than I ever could have on my own.

Your premise isn't wrong, it's incomplete.

For example, if an inferior system is too bright, a cable can affect the tonality and, sometimes, improve it. That's not the ideal way to get good sound, but that's a way in which the cable adds something that improves the signal. It's like a mediocre spaghetti sauce; adding parmesan can't save it, but it makes it better, overall.
For example, if an inferior system is too bright, a cable can affect the tonality and, sometimes, improve it



Which justifies spending $2/foot not 0.50 for bulk wire.
Yes really.

You want an IC to roll off the highs, you increase capacitance by putting the conductors closer together. You want speaker cables to roll off the highs, you increase inductance by spacing out the conductors. There is no magic.  However, doing either is highly system dependent, and almost always if you take your eyes out of the equation, not audible.


Some like Transparent add some cheap passive components to the cable. Some claim that adding a bias reduces noise (though the opposite happens). Some make claims about ground blocks, but can't seem to prove it.